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by audunw
340 days ago
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There are several scenarios where it would contribute: 1. You have access to a charger at work
2. You’re retired
3. You take public transportation or bike to work (fairly common scenario in Europe)
4. Work-from-home (got more common after covid, I know many people who do it at least once a week now, and that’s generally enough to charge what you need to drive for a week)
5. You charge only during the day on weekends (should be enough to cover the week for most people, even if you feed say 20% of it back to the grid through the week)
6. Rental fleet operators (booking data can inform charge/discharge policy)
7. Residential batteries, where you charge the EV at night with what you got during the day, every day, but set up a policy where you allow both the home battery and the EV battery to discharge if the electricity is expensive enough. I could see myself making decisions about WFH or biking to work based on electricity pricing. |
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